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I want to use an Adobe Stock photo in an e-mail that I am sending out in an e-mail marketing campaign.
But section 4.1(a) of Adobe_Stock_Additional_Terms_en_US_20190816_2200.pdf says that I can't use the Work in any way that allows a third-party to extract the Work as a stand alone file.
I spoke to the people who will be designing my e-mails and they said there is no way to stop someone I send the e-mail to from being able to extract the image as a stand alone file.
So does that mean I can't use Adobe Stock photos for e-mail marketing???
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Exactly, there is no way to stop a third party to extract the work. But you will not insert the full-size work, but a heavily reduced and optimized asset.
I think you can easily use Stock images for marketing purposes, also via e-mail marketing. I even think that e-mail marketing is somewhere noticed on the licencing pages.
Look here for more information on licensing: https://community.adobe.com/t5/stock/links-for-licensing-terms/td-p/11366788
(Disclaimer: As always with licensing, this is my interpretation of the rules. I think they are correct and advice is based on reading and interpreting the licence terms and on fair use for both the buyer and the artist/stock company, but I cannot rule out that my interpretation is wrong. I'm not an Adobe employee).
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Not an expert myself, but I can corroborate what Abambo is saying. Not using the work in a way that people can extract it: that refers to the original, full resolution image. For example, if you were bundling a bunch of images to provide as assets for another designer, you can't purchase rights to an Adobe image and add it to your bundle. You have a right to use the original you downloaded, but you can't just give it to someone else for the same purpose.
Using it in a layout for email marketing purposes is not the same, so you should be fine!